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Considering homeschooling this September? Here's everything you need to know about the practical steps to take

There’s already an active community of homeschoolers in Ireland and getting started is not a difficult process, writes teacher and homeschooler Cliona Brophy.

DO YOU REMEMBER the feelings of horror the phrase ‘Back To School’ stirred up when we were kids, as shops, television and radio ads gleefully advertised the end of the summer holidays almost as soon as we had our first lie-in?

Well, for once, many parents who would usually be counting down the days until their child gets back into the routine of school are dreading ‘Back to School’ 2020 and seriously looking to homeschooling as an alternative.

I am a homeschooling parent of two children now aged 12 and 10 and as such I have gone through the process of registering them as home educated.

If you would like to know what you need to do in order to start homeschooling officially, then read on… (the information you need to know on how to get the process started is contained below).

Firstly, homeschooling/home education (the terms are interchangeable) is fully legal in Ireland, enshrined in Article 42 of our Constitution. Some parents replicate school at home following a curriculum and timetable but there is no requirement to actually do so; parents are free to follow their children’s interests and aptitudes, as long as they provide a ‘certain minimum education, moral, intellectual and social’ (Article 42.3.2).

Secondly, before Covid there was already a growing, active community of homeschoolers. Many Facebook groups exist to support parents and provide in-person social outlets for children all over the country. Of course, Covid put paid to many events but the communities still exist and meet-ups will happen again.

Thirdly, the process you go through in order to officially home educate, currently overseen by Tusla, simply requires a form and a meeting to show how you will provide your child’s education. It’s not a difficult process and these meetings are currently being done by phone.

All children in Ireland are required to be in education between the ages of 6 and 16. If your child is under the age of 6 and you are considering not starting them in school this September – or not sending them back to a school you had them in – you do not legally need to inform anyone (although it would be advised to inform the school if you had been allotted a place for them).

If you want to homeschool your child aged from 6 to 16 you legally need to contact Tusla to add them to the ‘register of children being educated at a place other than a recognised school’ (which is maintained in accordance with Section 14 of the Education Welfare Act 2000).

If they already have a school place, the school must keep their place until informed by Tusla to remove them from their register. (The child will not be on a class roll-book, however, and so not marked absent.)

To get everything going, you inform Tusla by sending in a short form, available from the Tusla website at this link. It’s also possible to initially send a letter instead.

What happens next? Well, a Tusla representative, or ‘Approved Person’ (AP) contacts you to arrange the meeting/phone call, as mentioned above. This does not involve any interview or testing of your child and your child is not required to be present.

During the meeting/phone call, the Tusla AP goes through your answers to the questions on the form in detail. They will want to know that you have thought about methods and resources you could use in your child’s education. Many parents adapt their methods as the child’s interests and abilities develop and you can state you will do this.

You don’t need to follow the National Curriculum, you don’t need to have a teaching degree and you don’t need to cover every subject done in school.

For parents of children at secondary school age, the Tusla AP generally wants to hear of your plans to help your child reach further or higher education, should they so wish.

shutterstock_1059938519 Shutterstock / fizkes Shutterstock / fizkes / fizkes

The meetings or phone calls last about 90 minutes per child. The AP usually makes detailed notes and at the end of the meeting advises the parent(s) that they are recommending that the child be put on the register, pending the meeting of the board of the relevant Tusla department. (Although it does occasionally happen that a meeting ends with the AP being inconclusive in this regard, reports of this are extremely rare.)

Shortly after the meeting you will receive the written report from the AP with the opportunity to amend anything you want; then after the board meeting you will receive official notification of the child’s name being added to the register. At this point your child will be taken off the school register if they were on one.

Waiting

Currently, Tusla has a backlog of people applying. Some prospective homeschoolers have reported waits of 12 to 18 months between the initial contact and the meeting/phone call with the AP.

This does not affect your start date – once you make initial contact stating your intentions, you are covered to start homeschooling. So, you can start in September if you wish and relax in the knowledge that no one will come looking to discuss how it’s going until well into next year.

Your Child Benefit Allowance and Back to Education Allowance is not affected. If your child is 16-18 and registered with Tusla as still receiving full time education they are still entitled to CBA and if you qualify for the Back to Education Allowance you will receive it.

There are, however, no grants available to home educating parents for any expenses.

There are many things to consider of course – your whole family dynamic changes. Not having to get children up and out on a dark winter’s morning is a huge attraction of homeschooling but there is no handy manual either. Parents need to be hands-on which can sometimes be overwhelming, but it’s also true that there are no tests, no bench-marking and no rules. Pyjama days are also learning opportunities!

Homeschooling may well be a liberation for you and your child, particularly at this time of uncertainty. If you do decide to go down this route this year, it doesn’t mean you’re committing to homeschooling forever – you can opt to send your child to school again at any stage.

In the meantime, if you do decide to take the leap or want to find out more, you’ll find the link to the Home Education Network website here.

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    Mute Caoimhín O Neill
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    Apr 3rd 2020, 6:48 AM

    The only winners here will be the banks. I, like the rest of the country are on standby to bail them out again

    132
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    Mute Paul Cunningham
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    Apr 3rd 2020, 6:56 AM

    @Caoimhín O Neill: The banks always win, never lose and will still take out of your pocket in a pandemic. The cycle never ends

    113
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    Mute David Corrigan
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    Apr 3rd 2020, 7:00 AM

    @Caoimhín O Neill: 100% spot on Caoimhin. The paid bots on here shot me down numerous times when I said that after Hayes said the banks will help. They banks see this crisis as an opportunity to make massive money.
    I would beg on the side of the road for money to pay my mortgage and bills before I would ask a bank for help.

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    Mute Eugene Walsh
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    Apr 3rd 2020, 7:07 AM

    @Caoimhín O Neill: there’ll be no bail out. It’s a bail in. Digi currency. Time limit on your money under the mattress or void.

    22
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    Mute thomas mitchell
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    Apr 3rd 2020, 8:15 AM

    @David Corrigan: I’m 37 got sick reasonly (self employed) and the government gave me not one cent the only people who helped were the banks you deferred my mortgage for 6 months,some relief.look just my little story

    18
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    Mute David Corrigan
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    Apr 3rd 2020, 8:30 AM

    @thomas mitchell: I hope you are feeling better and doing well Thomas. Did the banks explain to you how much it will cost you for availing of that break though?

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    Mute Kevin Thompson
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    Apr 3rd 2020, 9:09 AM

    @Caoimhín O Neill: If 500000 people stay unemployed, there will be hardly anyone to bail out the banks

    12
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    Mute David Corrigan
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    Apr 3rd 2020, 9:19 AM

    @Kevin Thompson: That’s when they go after a percentage of any savings in the country Kevin.

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    Mute SJF
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    Apr 3rd 2020, 11:37 AM

    @David Corrigan: only if we let them.

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    Mute Caoimhín O Neill
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    Apr 3rd 2020, 5:11 PM

    @SJF: we will let them. Why wouldn’t we?

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    Mute Kevin Thompson
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    Apr 3rd 2020, 7:24 PM

    @David Corrigan: people will just take their money out of the bank, then there would be no cashflow

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    Mute Oisin
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    Apr 3rd 2020, 7:27 AM

    If we had government lead iniatives and public housing being built on a mass scale then the housing market wouldn’t be so volatile. Instead we are at the whim of speculators and developers.

    102
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    Mute Kevin Thompson
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    Apr 3rd 2020, 8:44 AM

    Prices will go down,if the unemployed people stay unemployed, after 3 months, as they can’t afford the already inflated rent. The landlords will have to reduce rents or sell.If the banks don’t agree to extend their 3 month freeze on Mortgages, they will be left with a lot of properties, with no cash coming in via mortgages. The banks will have to reduce interest rates, as a smaller income is better than no income.they don’t want to be left with a load of houses that they can’t sell at market value. Vulture funds will no longer see property as a viable investment.the new development will at some stage be finished.Prices will come down.

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    Mute Niall Bourke
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    Apr 3rd 2020, 10:26 AM

    @Kevin Thompson: You would think so but our present government support the huge rents. They are already pumping a billion a year into keeping rents inflated via various rent allowance payments. HAP’s started in 2014 and cost the taxpayer €0.5 million. In 2018 they had risen to €423 million. Last year it had jumped to €498 million. That is not all they spent last year. Add RAS (€95 million), Rent Supplement (€133 million) and SHCEP (€191 million). The total government spending on rent last year was €914 million. The government have consistently supported the rental sector. They won’t stop now.

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    Mute Kevin Thompson
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    Apr 3rd 2020, 10:31 AM

    @Niall Bourke: It’s a bad model to support rents, build more affordable houses, would be at a almost zero cost, (might have to initially borrow money and pay interest). They won’t have enough money to continuously support rent as that figure could Quadruple. Plus having to pay more Unemployment and less tax coming in.

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    Mute Niall Bourke
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    Apr 3rd 2020, 10:59 AM

    @Kevin Thompson: You would think so Kevin but they will find it. Maybe another temporary tax would help. They could call it the Universal Rental Social Charge (URSC) for short.

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    Mute Kevin Thompson
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    Apr 3rd 2020, 12:15 PM

    @Niall Bourke: I think that there would be mass protests

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    Mute Kevin Thompson
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    Apr 3rd 2020, 12:22 PM

    @Niall Bourke: Imagine asking the Nurses and Doctors and other health care workers and frontline staff to pay an additional tax, when this is over

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    Mute david hynes
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    Apr 3rd 2020, 7:10 AM

    Feck, here is me thinking I could get a good deal when this is all over, our housing market is seriously f##ked up

    72
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    Mute Kevin Thompson
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    Apr 3rd 2020, 8:17 AM

    @david hynes: don’t believe the hype, the estate agent would bite your hand off if you were to offer 20-30 thousand less than asking price

    53
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    Mute Da Vid
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    Apr 3rd 2020, 8:18 AM

    @Kevin Thompson: estate agents don’t own the properties.

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    Mute Kevin Thompson
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    Apr 3rd 2020, 9:02 AM

    @Da Vid: they will tell their clients to sell as they will not get any commission. they don’t want to spend too long on showing properties around and not to get income. Property won’t be a viable option for vulture funds as rent will go down.If there are no jobs to pay for the rent, people will move back to their parents, move abroad or rent will come down.

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    Mute Dino
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    Apr 4th 2020, 1:56 AM

    @Kevin Thompson: estate agent might but I as a potential seller wouldn’t. No way I’m selling my house for less than what I paid for it especially when I can just rent it out. People are still going to need housing after this and if anything the demand will go up due to the lack of houses being built now and before the covid crises. I wouldn’t be holding out for massive price drops like happened in the 2008 recession.

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    Mute William Kelly
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    Apr 3rd 2020, 9:37 AM

    New home completions will fall sharply, because building is paused, supply chains are interrupted, & mortgages withheld.
    The resale market will continue, as protected/ secure employments will get mortgage approvals,& prices will reflect availability. Scarcity may hold up prices until the flow of new homes comes back on stream.
    The long term impact is that more of the population, those in less secure employments, which category is now expanded, will never get approvals.
    The logic of this is that state public housing must be re-established as the primary housing provision for the bulk of the population. The current patchwork market system is inadequate, even with HAS, & will fail again, & again, leading to social unrest.

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    Mute Tordel Back
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    Apr 3rd 2020, 9:52 AM

    @William Kelly: Sense, in a Journal comment section? Truly these are the end times.

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    Mute Kevin Thompson
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    Apr 3rd 2020, 10:33 AM

    @William Kelly: State public housing for rent and affordable houses as affordable houses are at a net cost of zero

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    Mute Dave Thomas
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    Apr 3rd 2020, 8:05 AM

    Why the obsession with property? Far more important things in the World right now. Literally life and death!

    21
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    Mute Da Vid
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    Apr 3rd 2020, 8:17 AM

    @Dave Thomas: if you manage to stay alive you’ll need somewhere to live. Not add to the 10k plus already homeless. What this Pandemic has shown is that if the Gov really wanted to, they could change that figure too.

    74
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    Mute Kevin Thompson
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    Apr 3rd 2020, 9:05 AM

    @Da Vid: Dave, Do you own your property? If you are relying on a State pension when you retire, you won’t be able to support yourself. Either have somewhere to live and starve/freeze to death. Rents will come down, that will in turn cause house prices to go down too

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    Mute Vin
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    Apr 3rd 2020, 12:18 PM

    @Dave Thomas: the Journal is owned by the same company that Owns Daft

    It’s probably the best news source for the property market since they have direct access to the most data.

    Well news source with the best access to the data, not necessarily the best at writing about it but anyway

    7
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    Mute Kevin Thompson
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    Apr 3rd 2020, 12:54 PM

    @Dave Thomas: Do you own a property?

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    Mute Dino
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    Apr 4th 2020, 1:59 AM

    @Kevin Thompson: why will rents come down? No logic in that at all unless you see more properties coming available anytime soon? Those who still have jobs will pay the going rate, those who don’t will be assisted by government to pay the going rate. The fact less people will be eligible for mortgages means if anything more pressure on the rent sector which will drive up rents even more.

    1
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    Mute Locojoe
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    Apr 3rd 2020, 10:34 AM

    The Central Bank must now step up to the mark and help in this pandemic. What the Bank did duing the last crisis.should not be accepted this time.

    9
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    Mute G Row
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    Apr 3rd 2020, 10:51 AM

    @Locojoe: Ha ha good one, have you seen who’s back at the helm, bankers fanboys.

    15
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    Mute John Morgan
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    Apr 3rd 2020, 9:31 AM

    Get the builders back

    1
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